‘Up’ And Coming: 3-D Pixar Movie Tells A ‘Coming Of Old Age’ Story

Posted August 8, 2008 at 7:06 am | Tags: ·

At their heart, most of Pixar’s films are about connecting: a father with his son in “Finding Nemo,” a hero with his family in “The Incredibles,” a little robot with the whole universe in “Wall-E.”

Pixar’s newest film, “Up,” came from a desire to do the exact opposite, director Pete Docter said.

“Basically, I’m not a guy that loves being around people all day. There’s times where I just need to get away. This film is born of that feeling,” Docter told MTV News. “Sometimes, you just need to get away from everything.”

For 78-year-old Carl Fredricksen (voiced by Ed Asner), the geriatric hero of “Up,” that desire is manifested quite literally in an early scene, when he hooks hundreds of helium balloons to his house and soaring off through the skies to find a little peace and quiet among the clouds.

It’s a last-ditch effort for an aging man to make good on a promise he once made to his dead wife, who always wanted to see the mountains of South America but never could.

And if you buy that sequence, you’ll buy the whole film, Docter said, including scenes when Carl battles terrifying villains and creatures alongside a 9-year-old Boy Scout named Russell (who has stowed away for the ride in order to earn his “Help the Elderly” badge) when he finally touches down.

“Carl used to be a balloon salesman, and so when the outside world is going to take his house, he ties all his surplus balloons, fills them with helium, and floats his entire house up into the sky off to South America — that’s the image of the film,” Docter said. “It kind of defies description, because it’s moving, it’s emotional, it’s active, but it’s weirdly poetic and doesn’t make a lot of logical sense. And yet it’s really the cornerstone of the film.”

- from MTV



Leave a Comment